• DocumentCode
    1831810
  • Title

    Acid deprotection of covalently immobilized peptide probes on glass slides for peptide microarrays

  • Author

    El Khoury, G. ; Laurenceau, E. ; Dugas, V. ; Chevolot, Y. ; Merieux, Y. ; Duclos, M.-C. ; Souteyrand, E. ; Rigal, D. ; Wallach, J. ; Cloarec, J.P.

  • Author_Institution
    Lyon Nanotechnol. Inst., Lyon
  • fYear
    2007
  • fDate
    22-26 Aug. 2007
  • Firstpage
    2242
  • Lastpage
    2246
  • Abstract
    Protein microarray technology has shown great advancements in the field of biomedical research and diagnosis, it allows to study and understand protein activities and protein-ligand interactions (e.g. detection of antigen-autoantibody interaction in autoimmune diseases. Autoantibodies are frequently targeted against antigens of the cell nucleus (double and single stranded DNA, histones, and nuclear antigens). The biological activities of proteins (e.g. enzymes, antibodies...) are controlled by peptides sequences of the active site. Consequently, we were interested in the investigation of peptide microarrays in order to further implement in situ peptide synthesis, in particular, deprotection reaction on glass supported peptides. In this work, a protected and biotinylated synthetic peptide was covalently immobilized onto amino functionalized glass surface by activation of its the C-terminus; this allows to orientate the peptide onto the surface. The peptide contains a fragment of the C-terminal end of the human histone H3 protein. The immobilized peptide was then deprotected by using concentrated trifluoroacetic acid solution. After the deprotection, surface stability and peptide grafting density were evaluated by indirect labelling of the immobilized peptide using Cy3 streptavidin conjugates. We also studied biological interaction of IgG polyclonal anti-histone H3 antibody with the immobilized peptide epitope to insure the efficiency of the acid deprotection. The specificity of the antibody interaction with the protected versus non protected peptides. This approach may be applied to in situ synthetic and prototected peptides, in order to elaborate a micro-immunoassay prototype for measurement of peptide-protein interactions on high density microarrays, and detection of antibodies in biological fluids such as serum.
  • Keywords
    DNA; arrays; biochemistry; cellular biophysics; molecular biophysics; proteins; stability; C-terminal end fragment; Cy3 streptavidin conjugates; IgG polyclonal anti-histone H3 antibody; acid deprotection; antigen-autoantibody interaction; autoimmune diseases; biotinylated synthetic peptide; cell nucleus; covalently immobilized peptide probes; glass supported peptides; human histone H3 protein; immobilized peptide deprotection; in situ peptide synthesis; indirect labelling method; microimmunoassay prototype; nuclear antigens; peptide grafting density; peptide microarrays; peptide-protein interactions; peptides sequences; protein activities; protein microarray technology; protein-ligand interactions; single stranded DNA; surface stability; trifluoroacetic acid solution; Biochemistry; Biological control systems; DNA; Diseases; Glass; Peptides; Probes; Protection; Proteins; Sequences; Amino Acid Sequence; Antibodies; Biotinylation; Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay; Equipment Design; Glass; Histones; Humans; Immunoglobulin G; Ligands; Molecular Sequence Data; Peptide Library; Peptides; Protein Array Analysis; Proteins;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2007. EMBS 2007. 29th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    Lyon
  • ISSN
    1557-170X
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-0787-3
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/IEMBS.2007.4352771
  • Filename
    4352771